4.3 Article

Nutrition and health in hotel staff on different shift patterns

Journal

OCCUPATIONAL MEDICINE-OXFORD
Volume 65, Issue 6, Pages 477-484

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/occmed/kqv068

Keywords

Body dimensions; health; hotel; metabolic parameters; nutritional behaviour; restaurant; shift work

Funding

  1. Government Safety Organization Foods and Restaurants in Mannheim (BGN)

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Background Limited research is available that examines the nutritional behaviour and health of hotel staff working alternating and regular shifts. Aims To analyse the nutritional behaviour and health of employees working in alternating and regular shifts. Methods The study used an ex post facto cross-sectional analysis to compare the nutritional behaviour and health parameters of workers with alternating shifts and regular shift workers. Nutritional behaviour was assessed with the Food Frequency Questionnaire. Body dimensions (body mass index, waist hip ratio, fat mass and active cell mass), metabolic values (glucose, triglyceride, total cholesterol and low-and high-density lipoprotein), diseases and health complaints were included as health parameters. Results Participants worked in alternating (n = 53) and regular shifts (n = 97). The average age of subjects was 35 +/- 10 years. There was no significant difference in nutritional behaviour, most surveyed body dimensions or metabolic values between the two groups. However, alternating shift workers had significantly lower fat mass and higher active cell mass but nevertheless reported more pronounced health complaints. Sex and age were also confirmed as influencing the surveyed parameters. Conclusions Shift-dependent nutritional problems were not conspicuously apparent in this sample of hotel industry workers. Health parameters did not show significantly negative attributes for alternating shift workers. Conceivably, both groups could have the same level of knowledge on the health effects of nutrition and comparable opportunities to apply this. Further studies on nutritional and health behaviour in the hotel industry are necessary in order to create validated screening programmes.

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